The great apostle Paul had appealed his case unto
Caesar (Acts 25:11). After all the charges had been made, Agrippa
said, “This man might have been set at liberty, if he had not appealed
unto Caesar” (Acts 26:32). At his trial in Rome, due to
insufficient evidence, he was about to be released when the chief of the
Jews said, "But we desire to hear thee, what thou thinkest; for as
concerning this sect, we know that every where it is spoken against”
(Acts 28:22).
The word sect was used by Paul, but in denial. Paul
said to Felix, "But this I confess to you, that according to the Way
which they call a sect, so I worship the God of my fathers” (Acts
24:14, NKJV). In Acts 26:5, Paul said, “that according to the
strictest sect of our religion I lived a Pharisee.” In Acts 24:5,
Paul was described as “a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes.” In
Acts 5:17 the word is applied to the Sadducees, and in Acts 15:5
it was applied to the Pharisees. It is ironic that the word would be
used in reference to Paul, for the Holy Spirit used his pen to say more
in opposition to sectarianism than all other writers of the New
Testament combined.
What Is A Sect?
“A group holding similar views; a party. In
religion: a party dissenting from an established or parent church; a
body of sectarians. One of the organized bodies of Christians; a
denomination” (Webster).
Hairesis, a choosing, is translated “sect”
throughout the Acts except in 24:14, A.V., “heresy” (R.V.,
“sect”); it properly denotes a predilection either for a particular
truth, or for a perversion of one, generally with the expectation of
personal advantage; hence a division and the formation of a party or
sect in contrast to the uniting power of “the truth” held in toto; a
sect is a division developed and brought to an issue; the order
“division, heresies” in “the works of the flesh” in Gal. 5:19-21
is suggestive of this (W.E. Vine, An Expository Dictionary of Biblical
Words 1007).
Cruden’s Concordance comments: “This word is
generally used to mean a party in religion, differing in belief from the
main body. In our old version it is usually translated heresy, which the
revisions changed to sect. The religion preached by Christ and his
disciples was frequently called a sect, for it was quite a number of
years before it was extended to the Gentiles, and the Jews who embraced
it were faithful to the major part of their ancestral faith.”
According to these definitions, the term “sect” is
synonymous with heresy, division, and denomination, all of which are
condemned in the New Testament. Therefore, this cannot describe the
church of Christ.
What Is The Church?
Having defined a sect or denomination, we now define
the church according to the Bible. Please understand that we are not
necessarily discussing any particular congregation you may know or think
about. We are concerned about the church we read about in the New
Testament.
When the apostle Peter confessed the deity of Jesus Christ, Jesus said,
"Upon this rock I will build my church” (Matt. 16:18). That’s the
one we are speaking of in this study. When Jesus promised to build the
church, he meant that it would be of himself and belong to him. That is
why a plurality of congregations were called" churches of Christ”
(Rom. 16:16). It is noticeable to the student of the New Testament
that we never read of denominations as branches of the church. They all
came into existence after the close of the New Testament and without the
authority of God. This thought may be impressed upon our minds by simply
asking the question: Which denomination did Jesus have in mind when he
said he would build his church? The answer is that he had no
denomination in mind. From this thought we gather three important
lessons: (1) All denominations exist without the authority of Christ;
(2) No denomination that exists today is the church of Christ; (3) The
church of Christ, or the church that Jesus built, is not a denomination!
Seven Reasons Why The Church Is Not A Denomination
1. Christ was the builder. He said “church” not "churches.”
He spoke of “it” not "them.” Read again Matthew 16:18.
2. Christ is the foundation (1 Cor. 3:11). It was built upon
Peter’s confession of Christ. In his early years he was familiar with
building and grew up in a carpenter’s shop (Matt. 13:55). Did he
lay a foundation large enough for his building (church) and hundreds of
others? No, the foundation was designed and adequate for the building he
erected.
3. The church is the body of Christ (Eph. 1:22, 23). He is the head of
the body. Is he the head of many bodies or a divided and mutilated body?
No. “And he is the head of the body, the church” . . . “for the sake of
his body, which is the church” (Col. 1:18, 24).
4. Christ is the creed of the church (1 Cor. 1:23; 2:2). His word
is our guide and the basis for unity. Denominations are created and
function by their own human creeds.
5. The church must honor the name of Christ, not some man or
doctrine. "He is the head of the body, the church . . . that in all
things he may have the preeminence” (Col. 1:18). His name is the
basis for unity. The three rhetorical questions in 1 Corinthians 1:13
show that we are to wear only the name of him who is not divided, was
crucified for us, and in whose name we were baptized. That produces
unity, not denominationalism!
6. The church of Christ has no earthly or denominational
headquarters. Contrast that with Roman Catholicism, Mormonism,
Jehovah’s Witnesses, and other denominations.
7. The church of Christ has no denominational organization. Christ is
the head, and each congregation is to have a plurality of elders and
deacons (Phil. 1:1). Man-made denominations have formed hierarchies
and systems of government not found in the Bible. For example:
Catholicism, with the pope, cardinals, arch-bishops, priests, etc.
Present Conditions In The Church
Until recently, nearly everyone in the church
understood what it was and that denominations were sinful. But we see
change in the teaching of some brethren. Rubel Shelly is a good example
of this change. In 1972 he wrote:
Liberal elements within the churches of Christ have made great strides
toward turning the church into a denomination. Although not many
brethren seem to realize it, we are being influenced to abandon our
distinctiveness. I have recently encountered several individuals who are
frankly urging that we admit to being a denomination.
If we do not intend to maintain our distinctiveness, we have no right to
exist. If we are not going to preach the truth boldly, let us not preach
it at all. If we are unwilling to oppose false teachings and false
practices, let us quit claiming to be the people of the holy God! . . .
The church of Christ is not a denomination. But it will soon be if some
among us have their way! As soon as we cease preaching the distinctive
message of the gospel, we cease being the true church of Christ and
become something less (What Is Happening In The Church).
In view of the above statements, let us consider recent efforts by
Shelly to “abandon our distinctiveness" and “turn the church into a
denomination.” One of many will be sufficient.
Billy Graham is the nation’s leading exponent of denominationalism. In
his weekly newsletter, “Love Lines," February 23, 2000, Rubel wrote:
God willing, Billy Graham will be preaching four nights in Adelphia
Coliseum this spring. I hope you have marked June 14 on your calendar .
. . I hope you are praying over your “Operation Andrew" list of people
you plan to invite to the crusade. The likelihood that you know an
unsaved person who would attend one or more nights of the Graham Crusade
is very high. For one thing, curiosity alone might be enough to motivate
that person. Hearing Dr. Graham speak in one of the final crusades his
age and health will allow him to conduct could get someone there — and
the Spirit of God can handle things from there. The preached Word of God
can be his instrument to touch that person’s heart.
Brethren, can you believe what you just read? The “Spirit of God” can
handle things, but Billy does not preach what the Spirit has revealed.
On the day of Pentecost, the Spirit guided Peter to tell believers to
“repent and be baptized for the remission of sins” (Acts 2:38).
Billy does not preach that for he doesn’t believe it!
Shelly, who preaches for the Woodmont Hills church in Nashville, is a
General Committee Member for the Graham Crusade. He wrote that "Several
of our shepherds wrote letters of invitation to Dr. Graham to encourage
him to come to our city.”
There are more than fifty churches of Christ in Limestone County where I
live. The vast majority of them are conservative, understand what the
church is, and oppose denominationalism. Two churches (Valley Church and
Seven Mile Post Road) joined with fourteen denominational groups in
promoting and conducting a rock/gospel concert on a ball field at Athens
State University. The newspaper reported that souls were saved on the
field, and no one from those two churches denied it. The program had
mechanical music with the gospel songs and sectarian speakers.
One of the errors the two churches teach is that we are not under law
today. On their radio program June 4, the speaker said that each and
every one of the churches of Christ in the county is a sect. I deny it!
If they want to use labels, “faction” would be a good one for them for
they were formed in rebellion to elders in the churches where they were
raised.
Inconsistent and Confusing Teaching
F. LaGard Smith has written a book entitled Who Is
My Brother? In it he says many good things, and seems to want to defend
the church and the gospel plan of salvation. In other statements he
seems to want to compromise what he has said and extend fellowship to
those in denominations. Here is a sample of what I mean:
If indeed there is such a thing as “faith fellowship” apart from true
“in Christ” fellowship, the next question is, How does that fellowship
operate in practical terms?
It means, first of all, that we must be bold enough to acknowledge
Christ-centered faith wherever we find it — even in those who may be
outside the boundaries of Christian fellowship. We must come to accept
that it is not wrong to fellowship as believers others who wear the name
“Christian” but aren’t. Without giving anything away we can honor their
faith, learn from their faith, be rebuked by their faith, be prompted by
their faith, read the words of their faith, and sing the feelings of
their faith (112).
How can he say that they have Christ-centered faith, and that we can
emulate their faith in many ways if they are not in the faith and
walking by faith that comes by hearing the word of God (Rom. 10:17)?
If, as he said, they are wearing the name Christian but are not, then
they are in darkness. But true Christians are told to have no fellowship
with the unfruitful works of darkness (Eph. 5:11). I don’t follow
his thinking. To accept those who are not Christians and fellowship
those who are in error is not being bold; that is cowardly!
We are in complete agreement with the following statements by brother
James P. Needham:
When people say one church (denomination) is just as good as another,
they are correct, and all denominations put together are not as good as
the one God purposed in eternity, our Lord bought with His own precious
blood (Acts 20:28), and brought to fruition on Pentecost (Acts
2), which was prophesied by the Old Testament prophets, and fulfills
God’s eternal purpose (Eph. 3:10, 11). To say this divine
organization is equal to or parallel with human denominations is to
border on blasphemy and endanger the souls of those who so teach.
Those brethren who seem determined to make the church of Christ just
another denomination have lost their faith in the Lord’s order of
things, and have bought into the so-called ‘new hermeneutic.’ They
should study to regain their faith, repent of their sins, and pray for
God’s forgiveness, or failing that, join some human denomination where
they will feel more at home. When it comes to the Lord’s church, one
should love it or leave it (Gospel Truths, May 2000).
At the end of Pentecost (Acts 2), every saved person in Jerusalem
was in the church of Christ, for the Lord had added the saved to it
(v. 47). There was not a saved person who was not in the church, and
every responsible person outside the church was lost. That divine
process continues today. Therefore, the church of Christ is not a sect
or a part of anything; it is the whole thing!
-- Truth Magazine -- October 5, 2000
Other Articles by Wayne Jackson
Understanding Forgiveness
"New Hermeneutic" - An Abandonment of Reason
Justified by Faith
Tradition Versus
Scripture